Tag Archives: Chapter-a-Day

Oaths and Pipe-Dreams

“When a man makes a vow to the Lord or takes an oath to obligate himself by a pledge, he must not break his word but must do everything he said.
Numbers 30:2 (NIV)

I sat in a meeting. It was a big team and there was a definite buzz in the room. As the meeting began the team leader began to speak about his vision for the team and our task. That’s when it got weird. The team leader’s stated vision wasn’t just a BHAG (big, hairy, audacious, goal), it was more of a pipe-dream on steroids. And it wasn’t delivered as something to reach for as a team but more of a divinely authoritative statement about what was definitely going to happen. It was a form of oath of what the team leader was going to do, what the outcome would be, and our participation in his Powerball prognostication.

It was rash. It was silly. It was foolish. It didn’t take long for the team to implode. The team leader’s pipe-dream remained just that.

I commonly hear people use the phrase, “I swear to God.” It’s casually thrown out in our culture, but the concept of a divine oath is as old as humanity itself and throughout history oaths have carried very serious cultural and societal weight in ways we can’t imagine today. To make an oath was spiritually binding and carried with it the threat of divine retribution. In medieval times, a noble made an oath on the bones of St. Cuthbert and then broke his oath. Writers took great pleasure in sharing the terrible things that befell the noble as a result. In ancient Assyria, a treaty between parties was ritually sealed with the saying “May your seed be like this sheep’s entrails if you betray this oath.” And yes, a sheep was slaughtered as part of the ritual for visual impact of the seriousness of keeping one’s word.

Throughout history, if you said, “I swear to God” it would have been taken as a very serious statement for which you would be culturally held accountable by society. If you broke that oath, there would be the expectation that God would curse you and perhaps the community would take care of punishing you themselves in order to avoid the divine retribution having a ripple effect on them.

In today’s chapter, God reminds the Hebrew people through Moses that oaths were serious and binding. However, God also goes on to create a system of annulment for rash words and oaths. A modern reader might have difficulty getting past the ancient historical context of the annulment’s gender power dynamics, but for the Hebrews in Moses’ day God’s addendum to the law as a radical act of mercy for families and households. It provided a gracious “out” for rash words spoken in anger or foolish pipe dreams spoken out of hubris.

This seriousness about oaths and the ancient cultural preoccupation with the system by which oaths were made, kept, policed, and punished was Jesus’ motivation for saying,

“Again, you have heard that it was said to the people long ago, ‘Do not break your oath,but fulfill to the Lord the vows you have made.’ But I tell you, do not swear an oath at all:either by heaven, for it is God’s throne; or by the earth, for it is his footstool; or by Jerusalem, for it is the city of the Great King. And do not swear by your head, for you cannot make even one hair white or black. All you need to say is simply ‘Yes’ or ‘No’;anything beyond this comes from the evil one.”

In the quiet this morning, I find my mind wandering back into that room with the team and our team leader’s Powerball prognostication of pipe-dream glory. I learned an important lesson about leadership that day. There is a difference between an achievable stretch goal and a pipe-dream. There’s a difference between a BHAG and wishful thinking. As a leader, I want to provide an inspiring vision that motivates a team to rise to the occasion. Providing a flight of fantasy, like a rashly made oath, is only setting myself and the team up for a tragic fall.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.

Promotional graphic for Tom Vander Well's Wayfarer blog and podcast, featuring icons of various podcast platforms with a photo of Tom Vander Well.
These chapter-a-day blog posts are also available via podcast on all major podcast platforms including Apple, Google, and Spotify! Simply go to your podcast platform and search for “Wayfarer Tom Vander Well.” If it’s not on your platform, please let me know!
An open Bible icon with the text 'Bible Gateway' below it.

The Nations, and Me

“With each of the thirteen bulls offer a grain offering of three-tenths of an ephah of the finest flour mixed with oil; with each of the two rams, two-tenths.
Numbers 29:14 (NIV)

In today’s chapter, God continues to remind the people through Moses of the annual festivals He requires as part of the spiritual rhythm of the community. The final festival described is the “Festival of Tabernacles.” It was a one-week harvest festival held in the autumn. Families gathered and camped out in their own tent for the week, remembering how their ancestors camped out through the wilderness on the way to the Promised Land.

In the detail requirements for the festival, there were 13 bulls sacrificed on day one. The number of bulls sacrificed decreased by one each day until the seventh and final day of the festival in which seven bulls were sacrificed. Whenever I see a pattern like this, I know something is up. This is, after all, the book of Numbers and numbers are important in the Great Story, especially to the ancients.

If I add the total number of sacrifices for the week, it equals 70. Remember, everything in the Great Story is connected and this number 70 connects back to Genesis 10 which lists all the nations of the world. There were 70 nations listed. In our chapter-a-day treks through both Genesis and Leviticus, I observed that God promised Abraham that all the nations of the world would be blessed through him and his offspring. Then God tells the Hebrews at Mt. Sinai that the purpose of them following His ways and His priestly guidebook are so that they would be a light to the nations, showing them His ways.

How fascinating then to think that at the harvest festival, which carries all the metaphorical meaning of gathering in the fruit that has sprung from scattered seed, God asks for a daily series of sacrifices that represent what He is doing on a cosmic spiritual level throughout the Great Story. God wants the whole world to know Him, to learn His ways, and to follow. Jesus wasn’t making something new when He said,

“All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”
Matthew 28:18-20 (NIV)

Jesus was perpetuating the game plan that had been established with Abraham and clarified through Moses.

Yet as I meditated on this, there was more. The bull sacrifices during the week of the festival start with the large broad number of 13. That’s one more than the 12 representing the Hebrew tribes. It’s like saying we’re going to start with the all the nations. It’s Hebrews-Plus, the one metaphorically referencing “and everyone else.” As the week goes on, it is whittled down to the intimate and important number of seven, God’s number of “completion.” It’s like God starts with sacrifices for all the nations and then ends by bringing it back to the intimate, complete covenant He made with His people, with Abraham.

Over the past several years I’ve unpacked how God’s plan can be envisioned metaphorically like life on four levels. Level 1 is just me and God. Level 2 is me in relationship with others. Level 3 is me in relationship to the kingdoms of this world. Level 4 is me in relationship with God’s Kingdom. This too is echoed in the receding sacrifices of the Festival of Tabernacles. It begins with sacrifices for Level 3 and all the kingdoms/nations of the world. It tapers down to the final day of the festival when I’m reminded of God’s intimate and personal covenant with me on Level 1.

In the quiet this morning, I’m reminded that God’s ultimate plan for humanity in the Great Story is rooted in the individual. It started with one person in Abraham. Jesus taught His disciples that God’s Kingdom starts with each individual heart. Jesus transforms my heart and my individual life, which transforms my relationship with other individuals in my circles of influence, which then begins to transform my community, my cultures, and even nations.

“But remember,” God whispers in the Feast of Tabernacles and Jesus is saying in the Great Commission, “It all begins with Me in you.”

A good reminder for this Monday morning as I lace ‘em up and head into another work week. Have a good one, my friend.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.

Promotional graphic for Tom Vander Well's Wayfarer blog and podcast, featuring icons of various podcast platforms with a photo of Tom Vander Well.
These chapter-a-day blog posts are also available via podcast on all major podcast platforms including Apple, Google, and Spotify! Simply go to your podcast platform and search for “Wayfarer Tom Vander Well.” If it’s not on your platform, please let me know!
An illustration depicting the significance of the Festival of Tabernacles, featuring a depiction of tents and people gathered in celebration, reflecting the biblical themes of community, sacrifice, and spiritual connection.

The Next Generation

These are the ones counted by Moses and Eleazar the priest when they counted the Israelites on the plains of Moab by the Jordan across from Jericho. Not one of them was among those counted by Moses and Aaron the priest when they counted the Israelites in the Desert of Sinai.
Numbers 26:63-64 (NIIV)

I am currently in a season of life in which I am experiencing some major transitions. There has been transition at work as my business partner of many years is retiring and a new team member has joined us. I am currently transitioning out of a year of leadership in our local community theatre and assisting the new, young elected leader of the organization in assuming her leadership. Over the past couple of years our local gathering of Jesus’ followers experienced the retirement of our leadership team and an entire new generation of leaders emerge. Even in our company’s customer research we’re finding that generational shifts and differences are having an unprecedented impact on business.

In every area of life, I am reminded that my life journey is moving into an entirely new stretch of road.

Our chapter-a-day journey continues through the book of Numbers, and like its title, the book is full of counting. As we near the end of the Hebrews road through the wilderness, The tribes are camped by the river Jordan across from Jericho. God tells Moses to take another census of the Hebrew tribes. The book began with the same census, but that was 38 years earlier when the tribes were about to set out from Mt. Sinai. Aaron is dead. Miriam is dead. Different names are at the heads of each tribe. It is a completely new generation preparing to enter the Promised Land than the one that set out from Sinai in chapter one.

In the quiet this morning, the chill of autumn air wafts into my open office window. Even nature is whispering to me the annual reminder that the old passes away into the death of winter so that in the spring new life may emerge.

Chapters like today’s are easy to ignore or overlook. What spiritual lesson can an ancient census possibly have? Yet there are spiritual lessons lurking beneath the numbering.

Jewish scholars have traditionally viewed the census metaphorically as a Shepherd numbering sheep after a storm or an attack. The wilderness journey has been difficult. The Great Shepherd lovingly and protectively is numbering the flock, and as Jesus pointed out, God’s Kingdom is about not leaving one lost sheep behind.

Throughout the Great Story there is a threaded theme of the Book of Life containing all of the names of those in God’s Kingdom. Paul hints in his letter to the Romans that the climactic final chapters of the Great Story will not begin until the “full number” of Gentiles is reached (Rom 11:25). It’s a reminder that the entire Great Story is one metaphorical life span from the birth of creation to the death of history and an entirely new beginning that is introduced in the final chapters of Revelation.

And so, even as I experience all of the transitions in life, family, work, and community, I am reminded by everything from today’s chapter to the cool autumn breeze that this is all part of the natural flow of this earthly journey as well as the larger Story that God is authoring across time and eternity. I suppose I can fight against it. I can bitch about it. I can sink into fear, anxiety, or despair. Or, I can flow with it with it in faith that God is faithful through the generations, and that His promises never fail. There are good things ahead. They may be different, but they are good.

Lace ‘em up. The journey continues.

NOTE: Wendy and I are heading out for a week of vacation wrapped around the Labor Day holiday. I plan to return to our chapter-a-day trek through Numbers on Thursday, September 4th. If you need a fix until then, please check out one or more of these links to my chapter-a-day posts by book that can fill you until I return! Have a great holiday weekend!

Ruth
Jonah
Malachi
1 Thessalonians
James

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.

Promotional graphic for Tom Vander Well's Wayfarer blog and podcast, featuring icons of various podcast platforms with a photo of Tom Vander Well.
These chapter-a-day blog posts are also available via podcast on all major podcast platforms including Apple, Google, and Spotify! Simply go to your podcast platform and search for “Wayfarer Tom Vander Well.” If it’s not on your platform, please let me know!
Bible Gateway logo with an open book icon, representing online scripture access.

Our Tent is Full

“How beautiful are your tents, Jacob,
    your dwelling places, Israel!

“Like valleys they spread out,
    like gardens beside a river,
like aloes planted by the Lord,
    like cedars beside the waters.
Water will flow from their buckets;
    their seed will have abundant water.”

Numbers 24:5-7 (NIV)

Wendy and I are still amidst the slow process of addressing the contents of our lake house that was sold last December. This past weekend Wendy placed a shoebox on the kitchen island that contained all of the photos that we’d collected over 15 years and displayed on the walls there. I spent a little time digging through them. So many good times and memories with our family and dear friends. As Wendy and I paused to pray before breakfast yesterday, I felt a surge of gratitude for God’s goodness and blessing, and I expressed our thanks and praise.

Today’s chapter is a continuation of the story of Balak, King of Moab, and the spiritual guru for hire named Balaam whom he’s hired in hopes of cursing the Hebrew tribes camped in the wilderness and ensuring their defeat. Twice Balaam has gone through his pagan divination rituals only to have God demand from him a blessing for the Hebrews. Now, a third time, Balak demands a curse from the famous seer.

What’s interesting about this third oracle is that Balaam does not go through his normal pagan divination rituals. Instead, he “turned his face toward the wilderness” to look at the Hebrew camp. The Spirit of God comes upon him and he utters a word of prophecy like a true prophet of God and Israel. The Gentile pagan is used by God to bless His people, much like Zoroastrian astrologers from Persia showing up in Bethlehem to bless the infant Jesus with gold, frankincense, and myrrh. God is God. Throughout the Great Story God breaks standard operating procedures to use the most unlikely of individuals for His good purposes.

Balaam’s final message of blessing over Israel is fascinating when I meditate on the context. The Hebrew people are wanderers at this point in the story. They have no fortress. They have no palaces. They have no city walls or city gates. They are wayfaring strangers traveling through a wilderness of woe. But Balaam sees beauty in their tents, their tribes, and their families. The Hebrew people are a “garden” of goodness filled with a flowing abundance of love, joy, and shalom. Balaam sees the very thing God intended for His people all along and declared back at Mount Sinai before they set out. These people are different. God is with them. They are blessed.

As I meditate on these things in the quiet this morning, my mind wanders back to the photographs from fifteen years of family and friends at the lake. Good food, good drink, quiet conversations over coffee in the morning, laughter and the sharing of life over cigars and Scotch on the dock as the sun sets. So much love, joy, and shalom. Our tent was full of abundance of the things that matter most in life.

Our tent is still full of that goodness. Despite the fact that our season of having the lake house is over, our tent here in Pella is just as abundant with goodness. Just this past week Taylor and four of her girlfriends (and one baby girl), came to our house for a girls retreat. Wendy and I were so blessed to host them, to overhear their laughter and their tears as they made time to share life. In an hour or so Wendy and I will gather in the kitchen for our morning ritual of coffee, smoothies, the headlines, and the sharing of our lives together.

Shalom.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.

Promotional graphic for Tom Vander Well's Wayfarer blog and podcast, featuring icons of various podcast platforms with a photo of Tom Vander Well.
These chapter-a-day blog posts are also available via podcast on all major podcast platforms including Apple, Google, and Spotify! Simply go to your podcast platform and search for “Wayfarer Tom Vander Well.” If it’s not on your platform, please let me know!
Logo of Bible Gateway featuring an open book icon and the text 'Bible Gateway'

Miriam

In the first month the whole Israelite community arrived at the Desert of Zin, and they stayed at Kadesh. There Miriam died and was buried.

Now there was no water for the community

Numbers 20:1-2a (NIV)

Wendy and I have enjoyed having our grandson, Milo, with us this week as he attends Drama Camp at our local Community Theatre. Last night Taylor and Sylvie drove down to spend the night, as well. It’s so good to have them in the house. Wendy and I enjoyed chatting with Taylor about all sorts of things late into the evening last night. It reminds me of late evening conversations I used to have with my mom who crossed Jordan and entered the Promised Land just over two years ago. I miss her.

As I continue to progress along this life journey, I’ve been able to glance back and realize just how far I’ve come. There are many different areas of life in which I have grown in knowledge and wisdom, but among the places I feel I’ve grown the most is in my knowledge of and appreciation for women. I have noted many times before that God saw fit to surround me with women. I now look back at my younger self with empathy and a touch of pity for all of my ignorance and misunderstanding when it came to the fairer sex and all things feminine.

Today’s chapter begins with the death of Miriam, Moses’ and Aaron’s elder sister. She was the caretaker and watcher of her baby brother when she launched him into the river and watched him be taken in by Pharaoh’s daughter. She risked herself to make sure Moses not only lived, but thrived. Miriam brings the victory song after the parting of the Red Sea and the defeat of the Egyptian army, leading the women in song, dance, and celebration. Miriam is the first woman named a prophetess in the Great Story. Miriam is an amazing lady, yet as with most women in the Great Story, I’ve observed that she doesn’t get the respect she deserves. This is especially true in the traditions in which I’ve traveled along this earthly journey.

In Jewish tradition, Miriam is understood and celebrated to have a much larger role in the Story. In fact, both orthodox and mystical Jewish traditional hold Miriam up with honor. In their tradition, Miriam joins Moses and Aaron as a trinity of siblings through whom God uses equally to provide and channel what is essential for His fledgling nation. Specifically, they name the clouds of glory, manna, and “Miriam’s well.”

After the briefly delivered news of Miriam’s death abruptly begins today’s chapter, the very next verse says, “Now, there was no water for the community…” that was wandering in the desert. Jewish tradition holds that these are not separate facts in the retelling, but cause and effect. Miriam the prophetess was the channel and her well was the divine source of water for the Hebrews. It was like a rolling rock or portable stream that followed them as they wandered, channeling a stream of life-giving water and sustenance to each of the twelve tribes.

Moses was busy separating oceans and walking in thunder at the top of the mountain. Aaron was swinging incense and the center of the sacrificial, ritual spectacle. Miriam, quiet and unassuming, was humbly providing nourishment and sustenance for every day life on the journey. Suddenly, I hear the song of Bob Dylan in my heart and head. It’s Just Like a Woman.

Miriam represents the divine feminine that is equally a part of who God is though I’ve observed that it makes some people squeamish to consider the truth of this. Miriam brings to the Exodus story courage, prophetic vision, song, dance, rhythm, water, and nurture. When Miriam exits, the water dries up. This wasn’t a coincidence. God is going to provide water, but the brief drought reminds the Hebrew people who Miriam was and all that she brought to their community and to their stories. As they say, you don’t know what you’ve got until it’s gone.

And, this meditation on Miriam and her resourceful, feminine touch brings even more meaning to the events later in the chapter when God tells Moses to speak to the rock (speaking is such a feminine thing) so that it begins producing water and instead Moses strikes the rock with his staff (such a male way to handle things). Oh, Miriam, how you will be missed.

As Jews gather each year to continue celebrating the Passover meal as they have done for thousands of years, it has become common among many to place “the cup of Miriam” (filled with water) on the table next to “the cup of Elijah” (filled with wine).

In the quiet this morning, I find myself gratefully meditating on Miriam. She is the song before the sermon… the heartbeat before the battle… the whisper of a lullaby in a land of wails. She represents a sacred feminine force that doesn’t dominate but co-creates, that doesn’t rule through law but leads through love, rhythm, servant-heartedness, and remembrance.

I find myself thinking about my own journey, and my own story. I have been raised and rooted among strong, soulful women, and so I have an appreciation for what Miriam brought. I feel it in my bones. I’ve heard her song in lullabies, in choir lofts, at kitchen tables over coffee. Miriam isn’t just a character in the Great Story—she’s in the women who shaped me, the women who continue shaping the man I am today.

Note: I will be out next week traveling on business and then taking a few days to be with our kids and granddaughter. Lord willing, I’ll pick up this chapter-a-day journey on Monday, August 18th. If you need a fix, feel free to visit this page, pick a book, and enjoy the posts. Have a great week!

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.

Logo of Bible Gateway, featuring an open book icon and the text 'Bible Gateway'.

The Shift

The rabble with them began to crave other food, and again the Israelites started wailing and said, “If only we had meat to eat!
Numbers 11:4 (NIV)

There is a classic family video of when the girls were toddlers. One of their favorite toys were Polly Pockets, tiny plastic dolls that came with their own little pocket-sized doll houses. The girls want to take their Polly Pockets to bed with them, and I wouldn’t let them because they were a choking hazard. Oh, my goodness. Complete and utter emotional breakdown. So much so, that I just had to grab the video camera and video tape the moment. It is etched in my memory and ever reminds me of life’s meltdown moments.

Along my life journey, I’ve come to observe that adults have similar emotional meltdowns as toddlers, we’re just more sophisticated at it. In fact, as I meditate on it I can think of at least two full-blown adult emotional meltdowns I’ve witnessed in the past two week. One was a meltdown into rage and anger, the other into fear, anxiety, and despair.

Today’s chapter marks a major shift in the book of Numbers and establishes a recurring theme through the rest of the book. To this point, the text has continually presented the Hebrew tribes as compliant and obedient to whatever God asked of them through Moses. Today’s chapter starts with the people complaining generally about their hardships, as if it’s overwhelming public sentiment in the camp. Then it’s rabble, or a smaller group of disgruntled people with a specific complaint about God not providing an expansive enough menu. The incessant whining sends Moses, like the parent of obstinate toddlers, into his own full “I can’t do this anymore” meltdown of complaints to the Almighty.

As I think back to being both a parent and a leader in business, community, and church, all I can say is, “Yep. Been there. Done that.”

I have also noticed along my life journey that we love to pick and choose certain verses to demand literal obedience, typically those that have to do with morality like not getting drunk on wine, or ritual like keeping the Sabbath holy. But then there are verses like “greet one another with a holy kiss” that we conveniently ignore.

One of the verses that I don’t think I’ve ever heard addressed in a sermon on Sunday is from Paul’s letter to the Philippians that we just trekked through on this chapter-a-day journey a few weeks ago. Paul writes:

“Do everything without grumbling or arguing…
Philippians 2:14 (NIV)

In the quiet this morning, it occurs to me that it’s very easy for me to think of examples both current and past in which I’ve had to endure the whining, complaining, grumbling, and arguing of others. If there’s anyone I identify with in the chapter this morning, it’s Moses. That said, I recognize that it’s easy for me to point the finger at others and ignore the three fingers pointing back at me.

Have I grumbled about anything or anyone in recent days?
Yes.
Have I been discontent with current circumstances or lot in life?
Yes.
Have I said things or acted out of either my complaints or discontent in ways that weren’t productive or conducive to building others up?
Yep.

Mea culpa.


As I head into this, another work week, today’s chapter is a good reminder about attitude, gratitude, and contentment. The Hebrews shifted from contentment and obedience to grumbling and complaining, and my observation is that this is a really easy shift for me to mindlessly make in my own heart, head, emotions, words, and behavior. The shift back to contentment and obedience requires discipline, contentment, and trust.

“Do everything without grumbling or arguing…

Lord, help me not ignore that one, and learn to trust You more.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.

Promotional graphic for Tom Vander Well's Wayfarer blog and podcast, featuring icons of various podcast platforms with a photo of Tom Vander Well.
These chapter-a-day blog posts are also available via podcast on all major podcast platforms including Apple, Google, and Spotify! Simply go to your podcast platform and search for “Wayfarer Tom Vander Well.” If it’s not on your platform, please let me know!
A family video capturing toddlers playing with Polly Pocket dolls and experiencing emotional moments.

The Flow

At the Lord’s command the Israelites set out, and at his command they encamped. As long as the cloud stayed over the tabernacle, they remained in camp.
Numbers 9:18 (NIV)

Over ten years ago I had an idea. It was a great idea. The idea was for a book I would write. Everything flowed right out of my head and heart onto the page one day. It was such a great idea that I was really excited about it.

There it sat on the page for more than a decade. I’ve never forgotten it. I’ve even transferred all of the ideas from my journal to my computer. I thought about it often. About six months ago, things began to shift in life and at work. A couple of months ago a random networking contact introduced me to another random networking contact saying the two of us needed to meet. The person to whom I was introduced is a publisher. We connected on multiple levels in multiple ways, including being disciples of Jesus. Suddenly, everything aligned: circumstances, timing, and people.

I’m writing my book.

Along this earthly journey, as I have sought to follow God’s leading in my life, I’ve had to learn about flow. If I really believe what I say I believe, that God is authoring my Story and that there is a plan and purpose for my life, then I have to trust the Story. In turn, that means that sometimes the Story doesn’t fit the narrative that I would prefer if I were to write my Story myself. In fact, I have plenty of examples of trying to author the story myself the way I thought it should play out. That typically does not end well. Sometimes I have to wait. Sometimes it feels like nothing is happening. Sometimes things happen suddenly, unexpectedly, all at once like a flood.

In today’s chapter, the ancient Hebrews are learning about life with God in their midst. There was a cloud that covered God’s traveling tent temple. At night, the cloud glowed like fire. When the cloud lifted from the tent temple, they broke camp and followed. If it remained, they stayed put. Sometimes it stayed for a long time. Sometimes it lifted every day. Their job, was to go with the flow of when God was moving and where God was leading.

In the quiet this morning, I am reminded that God is God and He still operates the same way today as He did with the Hebrews. I don’t have a physical cloud, but I have God’s Spirit within me. I have prayer and discernment. If I am quiet. If I remain spiritually aware. If each day I am asking, seeking, and knocking at God’s door seeking God’s direction, then I will perceive and experience God’s flow.

I’ve discovered across my entire life journey that being a disciple of Jesus means learning to perceive, discern, and follow God’s flow.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.

Promotional graphic for Tom Vander Well's Wayfarer blog and podcast, featuring icons of various podcast platforms with a photo of Tom Vander Well.
These chapter-a-day blog posts are also available via podcast on all major podcast platforms including Apple, Google, and Spotify! Simply go to your podcast platform and search for “Wayfarer Tom Vander Well.” If it’s not on your platform, please let me know!
An orange icon featuring an open book, symbolizing a digital Bible or scripture reference.

Numbers (Jul-Sep 2025)

Each photo below corresponds to a chapter-a-day post for the book of Numbers published by Tom Vander Well in July through September 2025. Click on the photo linked to each chapter to read the post.

A scene depicting a large group of people in ancient attire gathered outside tents, with a mountain backdrop during sunset.
Numbers 1: Preparations
A large gathering of people surrounding a central structure at sunset, with tents arranged in the foreground and rolling hills in the background.
Numbers 2: Ordered Procession
A man sitting on a couch with three children, smiling and enjoying family time. The man wears a blue Cubs shirt, and the children are dressed in colorful pajamas.
Numbers 3: Echoes in the Ancient
Three Polaroid-style photos with blurred images of people, featuring blue and orange hues.
Numbers 4: Colors
A young boy in swimwear and sunglasses leaps off a diving board, while two older boys stand nearby. A festive banner is visible in the background.
Numbers 5: Maturing Takes Time
A person in a robe holding a hair dryer, with their head obscured by flying hair against a light background.
Numbers 6: Dedicated
A view from backstage of performers in white dresses on stage, with a person in a dark outfit and long hair visible in the foreground. The stage is decorated with lights and flowers.
Numbers 7: The Text is a Tool
A priest in white robes stands at the altar in a church, facing a congregation. The altar is adorned with flowers and religious symbols, creating a serene atmosphere.
Numbers 8: Spiritual Toddlers in an Adult World
A scenic landscape featuring rolling green hills, a winding dirt path, and a bright blue sky with fluffy clouds and soft sunlight.
Numbers 9: The Flow
Silhouette of a trumpet player against a vibrant backdrop of a concert stage and audience.
Numbers 10: Trumpet Sound
A father sits on the floor in a colorful room, talking to two young girls who look concerned. Toys are scattered around them, and sunlight streams in through the window.
Numbers 11: The Shift
3D anatomical model depicting the human skeletal and vascular systems, with arms extended.
Numbers 12: The Goal, the Role, and the Lessons
A man wearing a cowboy hat and sunglasses, with a rugged appearance, is posing against a blurred background.
Numbers 13: The Adopted One
A group of figures in cloaks stands on a rocky path, facing a dramatic contrast between dark clouds and a bright sunset, symbolizing a journey or transition.
Numbers 14: The Divergent Paths of Fear and Faith
A person with a fierce expression is clenching their fists, suggesting anger or aggression, set against a dark background.
Numbers 15: God’s Response
A surreal scene featuring clockwork gears and figures working amongst clouds, illuminated by a warm light in the background.
Numbers 16: Systemic Dysfunction
Grilled chicken breast sliced and topped with a mixture of chopped herbs, nuts, and oil, served on a white plate.
Numbers 17: I Choose
A collection of glass salt shakers on a wooden table, with one shaker tipped over and salt spilling out.
Numbers 18: An Eternal Covenant of Salt
Illustration featuring the title 'THE MYSTERY OF THE RED HEIFER' with a red silhouette of a cow, set against a black background, representing Numbers 19.
Numbers 19: The Mystery of the Red Heifer
A portrait of an older woman with a warm smile, dressed in a flowing garment and headscarf, standing by a river in a desert landscape with gentle hills in the background.
Numbers 20: Miriam
Close-up view of raindrops on a window with a blurred airplane silhouette in the background during sunset.
Numbers 21: Snake on a Stick
Close-up of a donkey with large ears and soft facial features in a green outdoor setting with trees and a cloudy sky.
Numbers 22: I’d Rather Be the Ass
A figure in a robe stands on a rocky outcrop overlooking a desert landscape filled with tents, under a starry night sky with a full moon.
Numbers 23: Ancient and Irrevocable
Two adult men and a small child jumping into a lake from a wooden dock on a sunny day.
Numbers 24: Our Tent is Full
A figure standing on a rocky ledge overlooks a vast desert landscape dotted with small structures and roads.
Numbers 25: “We Must Be Cautious”
A serene autumn landscape featuring orange leaves above a calm river, with silhouettes of mountains and a distant structure visible in the background.
Numbers 26: The Next Generation
Four women dressed in ancient-like robes stand together, gazing towards a river and bridge in a scenic landscape.
Numbers 27: God’s Radical Decision for Women
A scenic autumn landscape featuring vibrant orange and yellow leaves on trees, a winding path through a grassy area, and a soft sunlight illuminating the scene.
Numbers 28: Rhythms
A crowd of people watches as a group of oxen walks through a ceremonial gathering near tents, illuminated by glowing firelight.
Numbers 29: The Nations, and Me
A group of professionals engaged in a lively discussion at a conference table, with a charismatic man passionately speaking while others listen attentively.
Numbers 30: Oaths and Pipe-Dreams
Close-up of a person's hands holding an object, showcasing multiple bracelets on one wrist.
Numbers 31: Momento Mori
Two figures in traditional attire stand overlooking a river and valley at sunset, with cattle grazing nearby.
Numbers 32; A Sage Warning
Digital alarm clock displaying 5:00 AM on a bedside table with soft morning light filtering through the window.
Numbers 33: Just Another Day (or Not)
A row of ancient standing stones in a grassy field at sunset, with soft clouds in the sky.
Numbers 34: Boundary Stones
A scenic view of a canal flanked by brick buildings and lush greenery under a clear blue sky.
Numbers 35: Cities of Refuge
Four figures dressed in traditional clothing stand on a rocky landscape, gazing at a distant mountainous horizon during sunset.
Numbers 36: “Yeah, but…”
Promotional graphic for Tom Vander Well's Wayfarer blog and podcast, featuring icons of various podcast platforms with a photo of Tom Vander Well.
These chapter-a-day blog posts are also available via podcast on all major podcast platforms including Apple, Google, and Spotify! Simply go to your podcast platform and search for “Wayfarer Tom Vander Well.” If it’s not on your platform, please let me know!

Time to Forget

Brothers and sisters, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead,  I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.
Philippians 3:13-14 (NIV)

Over the past few years, Wendy and I have discovered a difference in the way we perceive and approach life. As we have dug into it, it’s allowed us to learn about ourselves and to better understand one another. It has to do with our orientation to time.

I have a strong orientation towards the past. I’m a lover of history. I have spent much of my life digging into I and my family’s genealogy. As I contemplate current events, I tend to seek the past for context. Even as I look to the future I tend to look to the past for patterns that might inform where things are headed.

Wendy, on the other hand, is very much future oriented. Her brain is constantly looking a step or two ahead and it informs both her present tasks and their relative priorities. Life for Wendy is a constant anticipation of what is next, while I give little thought to it.

Our very different orientations towards time often creates clashes in how we function both independently and in relationship. Knowing these differences has allowed us to be more empathetic and understanding towards one another.

This past week our local gathering of Jesus’ followers focused our thoughts on Jesus’ words in the Lord’s Prayer: “forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.” Wendy and I spent some time talking about forgiveness and resentment, exploring whether or not we have truly forgiven those who have hurt us in the past.

As we continued our conversation, Wendy began quizzing me about a couple of individuals in my own life story who have been the source of considerable struggle for me. As we discussed these individuals and I have continued to meditate on my relationship with them and their impact on my life, it has struck me that my time orientation towards the past might lend itself to unhealthy thought patterns.

In today’s chapter, Paul references his own past and as a disciple of Jesus he had a lot of baggage. Once the most rabid enemy of Jesus and His followers, Paul had the blood of martyrs on his hands. Paul oversaw the stoning of Stephen. It is unknown how many other individuals suffered, were imprisoned, or died as a result of Paul’s zealous persecution of the Jesus Movement, but it is certainly likely that at least some of the opposition he constantly faced linked back to the suffering he once inflicted on others.

This came to mind as I read Paul’s words in today’s chapter:

But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead,  I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.

I happen to be entering a new stretch of my life journey. Old things are passing away. New things are emerging. As this happens, I am reminded by Paul’s words that I need to spiritually strain against my natural time orientations which often keep me mentally, emotionally, and even spiritually mired in what lies behind. There are some things on the road behind me that I need to forget in order to focus my mental, emotional, and spiritual energies on straining toward what is ahead.

Fortunately, I’m married to a partner whose natural orientation toward time can help me with that.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.

Promotional graphic for Tom Vander Well's Wayfarer blog and podcast, featuring icons of various podcast platforms with a photo of Tom Vander Well.
These chapter-a-day blog posts are also available via podcast on all major podcast platforms including Apple, Google, and Spotify! Simply go to your podcast platform and search for “Wayfarer Tom Vander Well.” If it’s not on your platform, please let me know!
Bible Gateway logo featuring an open book icon

Philippians (Jul 2025)

Each photo below corresponds to a chapter-a-day post for the book of Philippians published by Tom Vander Well in July 2025. Click on the photo linked to each chapter to read the post.

A young man intently looking at his smartphone with a statue of a bearded man holding a scroll in the background.
Philippians 1: Trauma Bragging and Paul’s Chains
A desert landscape at sunset, featuring a winding path with chains on the ground, surrounded by grasses under a blue sky with clouds.
Philippians 2: The Exodus Paradigm
An hourglass with black sand, featuring a silhouette of a person sitting inside the upper bulb, placed on a wooden floor with soft light coming through sheer curtains in the background.
Philippians 3: Time to Forget
A framed text displaying Philippians 4:6-7, written in an artistic font, encouraging a life free of anxiety through prayer and thanksgiving.
Philippians 4: Words for “The Anxious Generation”
Promotional graphic for Tom Vander Well's Wayfarer blog and podcast, featuring icons of various podcast platforms with a photo of Tom Vander Well.
These chapter-a-day blog posts are also available via podcast on all major podcast platforms including Apple, Google, and Spotify! Simply go to your podcast platform and search for “Wayfarer Tom Vander Well.” If it’s not on your platform, please let me know!